The effects of ultraviolet radiation on the moderate halophileHalomonas elongataand the extreme halophileHalobacterium salinarum

Abstract
Both the moderately halophilic bacterium, Halomonas elongata, and the extremely halophilic archaea, Halobacterium salinarum, can be found in hypersaline environments (e.g., salterns). On complex media, H. elongata grows over a salt range of 0.05-5.2 M, whereas, H. salinarum multiplies over a salt range of 2.5-5.2 M. The purpose of this study was to illustrate the effect that solar (UV-A and UV-B) and germicidal radiation (UV-C) had on the growth patterns of these bacteria at varied salt concentrations. Halomonas elongata grown on a complex medium at 0.05, 1.37, and 4.3 M NaC1 was found to be more sensitive to UV-A and UV-B radiation, as the salt concentration of the medium increased. Halobacterium salinarum grown on a complex medium at 3.0 and 4.3 M NaC1 did not show a significant drop in viability after 39.3 kJ·m-2of UV-A and UV-B exposure. When exposed to UV-C, H. elongata exhibited substantially more sensitivity than H. salinarum. In H. elongata, differential sensitivity to UV-C was observed. At 0.05 M NaCl, H. elongata was less sensitive to UV-C than at 1.37 and 4.3 M NaCl. Both bacteria showed some photoreactivation when incubated under visible light following both UV-A, UV-B, and UV-C exposure. Mutagenesis following UV-C exposure was demonstrated by both organisms.

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